http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2011/05/23/world/asia/international-us-pakist
an-alqaeda-pearl.html?ref=world
<http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2011/05/23/world/asia/international-us-pakis
tan-alqaeda-pearl.html?ref=world&pagewanted=print> &pagewanted=print

 

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Saif al-Adel, an Egyptian militant recently appointed
interim leader of al Qaeda operations, has been linked to the killing of
U.S. journalist Daniel Pearl in Pakistan in 2002, U.S. investigators said in
a report. 

Reuters

A Wall Street Journal reporter, Pearl was kidnapped in Pakistan's biggest
city of Karachi in January 2002 while researching a story on Islamist
militants, and was later beheaded. 

The findings by investigators of the Pearl Project revealed al-Adel had
discussed Pearl's abduction with Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, also known as KSM,
the accused mastermind behind the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United
States. 

"KSM told the FBI that he was pulled into the kidnapping by a high-level
leader in al Qaeda circles, an Egyptian named Saif al-Adel, who told him to
make the kidnapping an al Qaeda operation," said the investigators in their
report which was published in January. 

Journalism academics and students set up the Pearl Project at Georgetown
University in the United States to investigate Pearl's kidnapping and
murder. 

The linkage of al-Adel to Pearl's murder shows the long-standing ties
between al Qaeda and Pakistan militancy, which flourishes not only in the
lawless northwest along the Afghan border but in Karachi and other urban
centers. 

Pearl fell into al Qaeda's hands after Pakistani militants, the subject of
Pearl's research, kidnapped him. 

Al-Adel learned of Pearl and approached Mohammad to take him off the
Pakistani militants' hands. 

"He (al-Adel) thought this was an opportunity," Mohammad told FBI agents,
according to the report's authors. 

"We can take advantage of it. He said he wanted to make sure it's an al
Qaeda thing." 

Mohammad, who was arrested in Pakistan in 2003 and taken to the U.S. prison
at Guantanamo Bay, later admitted he beheaded Pearl. 

Mohammad told investigators he initially had no idea about the kidnapping
and he also said al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was reportedly angry over
Pearl's brutal killing, the report said. 

A former chief prosecutor for Guantanamo Bay
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/d/detainees/mi
litary_commissions/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> military commissions
told the researchers: "One of the high value detainees told interrogators
that Osama bin Laden was angry that KSM had slaughtered Pearl so publicly
and brutally, arguing that the murder brought unnecessary attention on the
network." 

A British-born Islamist militant, Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, was sentenced to
death by a Pakistani court in 2002 for his role in Pearl's killing. He has
appealed his conviction. Three other co-accused who face life sentences,
have also appealed. 

Al-Adel, the latest militant named in connection with Pearl's murder, was
appointed al Qaeda's temporary leader following the killing of bin Laden by
U.S. special forces in a Pakistani town on May 2. 

U.S. prosecutors say al-Adel is one of al Qaeda's top military commanders
and helped plan 1998 bomb attacks on the U.S. embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania. They also say he set up al Qaeda training camps in Sudan and
Afghanistan in the 1990s.

 



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